Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany, US revive security cooperatio­n

US Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III is the first Biden administra­tion official to come to Germany. Several high-stakes issues have been on his agenda — and he has made some surprise announceme­nts.

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Germany is getting 500 more US troops. US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin made the announceme­nt at a news conference with German Defense Minister Annegret KrampKarre­nbauer on Tuesday in Berlin.

"These forces will strengthen deterrence and defense in Europe," Austin said. "And, if necessary, fight and win."

If the deployment bears out, which Austin said could happen as early as the fall, it would reflect a sharp departure from the policies of Former President Donald Trump. In 2020, Trump said he wanted to move as many as 12,000 US troops out of Germany — as well as the headquarte­rs of the US military's European and African Commands.

President Joe Biden ordered that decision paused for review shortly after taking office in January.

"Today's visit and the approval of new troops send a very strong signal about the alliance between America and Germany," Kramp-Karrenbaue­r said. "The American decision to do this encourages us in Germany to further contribute" to strengthen­ing both the bilateral and

NATO partnershi­ps.

Austin's visit is part of a tour including visits to key allies such as Israel, the United Kingdom and NATO in Brussels. He served in Germany during his military career, but this is his first trip as defense secretary: a civilian role. He is also the first Biden administra­tion official to make an inperson visit to Germany.

Alliance doubts, external threats

His presence in Europe comes as pressure mounts on multiple fronts. Russian troops appear to be massing along Ukraine's border. An Afghanista­n withdrawal deadline looms.Israel is suspected of sabotaging an Iranian uranium enrichment facility, which happened while Austin was in Israel and as European countries attempt to restart nuc

lear talks with Iran.

Easy solutions to these and other global security problems are in short supply, and the alliance remains divided over several of them. The highrankin­g US visit is part of the Biden administra­tion's diplomatic effort to reestablis­h the United States as a leader in managing global stability, and to reassure nervous allies shaken by the former Trump administra­tion's often dismissive, sometimes bullying tone.

"You can't overstate the signal Lloyd Austin gave by making his announceme­nt," Thomas Kleine-Brockhoff, vice president of the German Marshall Fund, told DW. "That doesn't solve anything, but it gets you on track to talking about things completely diffe

rently."

News of extra US troops was unexpected, Kleine-Brockhoff added, saying it puts the ball in Germany's court as it evaluates its own commitment to the military alliance.

It is unclear if the announceme­nt is a direct response to Russian troop activity near Ukraine, which Kleine-Brockhoff said is a Russian effort to test the Biden administra­tion. It also presents a challenge to NATO in how to respond, as the alliance sees itself as responsibl­e for defending eastern Europe.

Despite short-term success at halting a Russian advance in Ukraine, the West has "failed to turn it into a political process that gets us any step closer to a longer-term solution. How prescient that is, the Russian troop movements are showing us," he said.

Top brass get down to brass tacks

Like Trump, Biden opposes Nord Stream 2, an undersea gas pipeline that could double Russian natural gas sales to Germany. Biden has called it a "bad deal" for Germany and looks set to continue a policy of sanctions from the Trump era in hopes of killing the project.

The German government defends Nord Stream 2 as a commercial deal divorced from geopolitic­s. The US and many of Germany's European allies say that is naive, worrying that it undermines climate goals and jeopardize­s both German and European security. They want to cut off Russian state coffers, which can fund saber-rattling near Ukraine and elsewhere, from a potentiall­y lucrative source of revenue.

In a possible step towards resolution, the German government's coordinato­r for transAtlan­tic relations repeated his call for a moratorium on pipeline constructi­on.

"It is an obstacle to restarting the German-American relationsh­ip," Peter Beyer told DPA, the German Press Agency, during Austin's visit.

Defense spending is another holdover from the Trump years — and the Obama ones before that, when Joe Biden was vice president.

Trump frequently berated

Germany for not meeting spending targets, which NATO members agreed to set at 2% of national GDP. His administra­tion often overlooked the fact, however, that members have until 2024 to do so.

Germany's defense budget has increased by about one-third since 2013, according to NATO figures, but that remains below the NATO median. It is also one of the western alliance's few members to fall short of a lesserknow­n metric — that 20% of spending goes towards equipment.

On Tuesday, Austin said he would like to see military spending pick up, but acknowledg­ed Germany's progress and that it still has time to fulfill its commitment­s.

The Greens question

From Berlin, Austin plans to head south, where Germany hosts one of the largest contingent­s of US troops abroad. Their decades-long presence is broadly supported for symbolic, security, and economic reasons.

The military lovefest is not total, however. A strong antiwar and anti-nuclear streak runs through German postwar history, which the ascendant Greens are tightly connected to. The party is in a strong position to join the next government after September's general elections, and possibly even run it.

The Greens campaign platform is supportive of NATO and transatlan­tic relations while calling for a nuclear-weapons-free Germany. That would undo US military planning and contradict NATO's nuclear sharing policy.

"Aside from the ethical aspects, nuclear sharing is a completely outdated and unsuitable answer to the wide range of current threats that NATO faces today," the Greens' Tobias Lindner, who chairs the German parliament's defense committee, told DW in a statement.

The party platform also rejects the two percent spending target as "arbitrary," calling instead for "fair burden-sharing."

Lindner, who considers himself a staunch supporter of the trans-Atlantic partnershi­p, last month voted to extend Germany's military mission in Afghanista­n under the NATO umbrella. Most of his party colleagues voted against it or abstained.

When and how to withdraw after 20 years in Afghanista­n was a top issue for Austin's meeting with Kramp-Karrenbaue­r. At a news conference last month, Biden said the US does plan to withdraw its own troops at some point, but unlikely by a May 1 deadline. Both sides say they will consult each other before making any decisions.

That is especially critical for Germany, whose troops often rely on US firepower when they get into trouble on the ground.

This is an updated version of a previous article.

While you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society, with an eye toward understand­ing this year's elections and beyond. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing, to stay on top of developmen­ts as Germany enters the post-Merkel era.

 ??  ?? Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was the first official from the Biden cabinet to visit Germany
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was the first official from the Biden cabinet to visit Germany

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